Its not too bad but has a few problems. Here is a test sketch using your part and a pair of .1 5 pin connectors to make connections to your part:
eb2.fzz (13.2 KB)
on breadboard note the connectors are connecting to the middle of the pin, typically they should connect to the end of the pin (which is achieved by moving the terminal rectangle in the svg to the end of the pin). Usually the pins would be on .1 centers but in this case the horizontal spacing is .38 inch, so it won't fit on a standard breadboard and thus yours looks correct and we just live with it (its usually best if parts match the real world). In schematic same problem same solution: move the terminal rectangle to the end of the pin and the connection (at an angle) will pivot on the end of the pin as it should (if you do this same thing with the part I posted last night you will see what I mean, there the connector bends at the end of the pin as it should). With the note that I rarely use PCB and surface mount even less so my advise may be suspect (hopefully one of the pcb experts will chip in here!) the silkscreen is overlapping the copper of the pad and I think that will be a disaster when you attempt to solder this. As noted I don't know what the standard thing is for a silk outline on a surface mount component but I'm pretty sure this isn't it . Again the pad is defaulting to the center of the pad area which may or may not be how it is supposed to work, again I don't know what is standard here. You can get the proper alignment if you manually route the traces correctly so perhaps this is how it is usually done.
Peter